[ CERVICAL SOFTWEAR ]

TheCervical Softwear.

Cervical region — neck and cervico-thoracic junction

Also: Scarves · Neckwarmers · Snoods · Neckwear

[ IN DEVELOPMENT ]

Cervical Softwear specimens are being formulated. No specimens are currently available in this category. Complete your Intake for a prognosis — the prescription will reference this category when specimens are ready.

[ DIAGNOSTIC ]

The prescription, explained.

What is this?
Cervical Softwear is the SOME DOSE category for neck and collar wearables — scarves, cowls, and structured neck coverings. The cervical region is where postural tension accumulates from forward-head posture, cold air, and the habitual contraction of the desk-bound commute.
Who is it for?
Prescribed for desk workers, commuters, and anyone who operates under fluorescent light or in air-conditioned rooms for more than four consecutive hours. The Itch at the collar — synthetic fabric, coarse wool, elastic trim — is the daily trigger this category addresses.
What does it cost?
Cervical specimens are priced from €60 to €150, EUR, VAT included. Made-to-order specimens ship within three to four weeks. In-stock specimens ship from Ireland within two business days.
How does it work?
Select by fiber and coverage area. Fine-knit cowls layer under a collar without adding bulk. Structured scarves drape over the cervico-thoracic junction for both warmth and sensory cover. Each specimen lists fiber, drape weight, and wearing notes on its product page.

[ FAQ ]

Common questions.

What is Cervical Softwear?
Cervical Softwear is SOME DOSE's category for neck and collar wearables. The cervical spine runs from the base of the skull to the first thoracic vertebra. This region accumulates more postural load per hour than any other during desk and device use, making textile contact here a primary target for sensory prescription.
What fibers are used in Cervical specimens?
Cervical specimens use fine-gauge Merino wool (under 20 microns), cashmere-blend knits, and brushed cotton-jersey. Fibers are selected for low irritation at direct neck contact. Each specimen lists fiber content, staple micron count where relevant, and care instructions on its product page.
How should Cervical Softwear be cared for?
Merino and cashmere-blend cervical specimens require cold hand-wash at under 30°C. No machine wash, no tumble dry. Dry flat to preserve drape. Cashmere-blend specimens follow the cashmere care protocol at /care/cashmere.

Last updated: May 2026